Monthly Archives: February 2018

The latest weather model projections show significant amount of snow over the next 72 hours. This will certainly help California’s drought situation. However it’s going to completely cripple road travel over I80, Highway 50 299 32 and possibly Highway 70. The majority of snow is expected on Thursday night, and low snow levels down to…

Guest essay by Eric Worrall The localised US “global warming hole” seems to have taken an excursion to Northern Africa, Europe, Russia, Asia and Great Britain over the last few weeks, but this hasn’t stopped climate explainers from trying to fit all that cold and snow into their global warming narrative. Q&A: What does all…

Uranium and other radioactive materials, such as caesium and technetium, have been found in tiny particles released from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors. This could mean the environmental impact from the fallout may last much longer than previously expected according to a new study by a team of international researchers, including scientists from The…

I’m at the NASA press Center on Merritt Island at this moment, writing live from the John Holliman Press Center. As you can see above in the top graphic, the upcoming press conference will be carried live, so readers are encouraged to tune in. You can also ask questions using the #AskGOES hashtag on Twitter…

Guest disalarmism by David Middleton Do you ever watch the DIY Network? The TV network where they have all the “Do It Yourself” home improvement shows? I don’t watch it because I can’t do anything like that myself. If a home improvement or repair project is much beyond duct tape and bungee cords, I’m on…

From KING ABDULLAH UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY (KAUST) By integrating previously distinct statistical paradigms into a single modeling scheme, Raphaël Huser from KAUST and Jennifer Wadsworth from Lancaster University in the UK have taken some of the guesswork out of modelling of weather extremes. This could greatly improve predictions of future extreme events. Modeling the…

Guest essay by Tom Peer Poor old carbon dioxide. One minute it was a harmless gas providing as vital a link in the cycle of life as water or oxygen and then the next thing it knows it’s a pollutant. To add insult to injury it’s not even carbon dioxide any more, just plain old…

News Analysis by Kip Hansen Jean Lafitte, Louisiana, is situated at two feet above sea level and about ten miles south of New Orleans. It has the misfortune to sit just outside of the protective system dykes and levees that keep New Orleans from flooding. John Schwartz, at the New York Times, writes about…

This paper was published in late 2017, and we didn’t notice it then. Today thanks to a tip from Dr. Willie Soon, via Willis Eschenbach, we notice it now. The paper is open access. See PDF link below. Seeding Chaos: The Dire Consequences of Numerical Noise in NWP Perturbation Experiments Abstract Studying changes made to…

By Dr. Susan Crockford My new report reveals that polar bears are doing well despite recent reductions in sea-ice. It shows in details why this is so, with summaries of critical recent research. Press release and pdf below. And read my op-ed in the National Post here. Here it is, in pdf form: State of…

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